Formally Recognized:
1953/05/26

Other Name(s)

Links and documents

Construction Date(s)

1853/01/01 to 1856/01/01

Listed on the Canadian Register:
2007/05/22

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

Chiefswood is a small gem of an Italianate villa set in a picturesque treed landscape on the banks of the Grand River in the heart of the Six Nations Grand River Territory, in Ontario. Its location is key to its historic meaning as the home of the Johnson family, especially poet E. Pauline Johnson. The formal recognition refers to the interior and exterior of the house.

Heritage Value

Chiefswood National Historic Site of Canada was designated because it speaks to the Johnson family's role as intermediaries between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal cultures.

Built between 1853 and 1856 for Six Nations Chief George H.M. Johnson (1816 - 1884), Chiefswood was the birthplace of poet Emily Pauline Johnson and the Johnson family home until George Johnson's death in 1884. Johnson was prominent socially and politically, serving as official government interpreter, thus bridging both the British colonial and First Nations worlds. He built his home on farmland he purchased along the Grand River, close to the Anglican mission church near Tuscarora (Middleport). While not the only mansion built by First Nations families during the nineteenth century, Chiefswood is the only one of such a grand scale and architectural sophistication known to have survived.

Character-Defining Elements

Aspects of this house that contribute to its heritage value include those elements which speak to the Johnson’s family role as intermediaries between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal cultures, namely:- the location of the house on the Six Nations Grand River Territory;- its intimate relationship with its natural setting, the river and the surrounding landscape; - its use of the Italianate architectural vocabulary as a sophisticated and fashionable manner illustrated by the symmetrical elevation, two-storey volume with truncated hip roof and chimneys, deep bracketed eaves, stucco finish, sash and French windows, classically inspired frontispiece, and standard, centre-hall floor plan with surviving, classically inspired trim.